Pinoy workers stranded in UAE leave for RP
MANILA, Philippines - Twenty-one of some 61 Filipino masons and carpenters stranded in the United Arab Emirates have flown home after their South Korean employer paid their due wages and shouldered their travel expenses.
Online news site Khaleej Times reported a labor arbiter at the Ministry of Labor gave the company 15 days to pay all outstanding dues as well as the air tickets.
The report said the remaining Filipino workers are expected to leave for the Philippines once the company accomplishes the needed paperwork.
Also, the report said a general contractor, Bolim, has offered new jobs to at least 14 workers.
Meanwhile, a final batch of three workers working for a private company at Business Bay Crossing and other projects also left for Manila last Friday.
But one of the three who were left out when their co-workers departed from Dubai in two batches, said the payment for their air tickets was deducted from their last pay.
"We do not have enough cash to go to our provinces from Manila. We were also asked to pay penalties for our overstay. The company's public relations officer paid the fines but did not provide us with any cash for our bus fare from Manila to our home town," he said.
Jocelyn Hapal, head of the Overseas Operations Coordinating Service heading the Mobile Re-integration Task Force from Manila, said the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration and the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration will request their manpower recruitment agency in Manila, Orient Placement Agency, to assist the workers to facilitate their homeward trip. - GMANews.TV
Online news site Khaleej Times reported a labor arbiter at the Ministry of Labor gave the company 15 days to pay all outstanding dues as well as the air tickets.
The report said the remaining Filipino workers are expected to leave for the Philippines once the company accomplishes the needed paperwork.
Also, the report said a general contractor, Bolim, has offered new jobs to at least 14 workers.
Meanwhile, a final batch of three workers working for a private company at Business Bay Crossing and other projects also left for Manila last Friday.
But one of the three who were left out when their co-workers departed from Dubai in two batches, said the payment for their air tickets was deducted from their last pay.
"We do not have enough cash to go to our provinces from Manila. We were also asked to pay penalties for our overstay. The company's public relations officer paid the fines but did not provide us with any cash for our bus fare from Manila to our home town," he said.
Jocelyn Hapal, head of the Overseas Operations Coordinating Service heading the Mobile Re-integration Task Force from Manila, said the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration and the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration will request their manpower recruitment agency in Manila, Orient Placement Agency, to assist the workers to facilitate their homeward trip. - GMANews.TV
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